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China’s ’Gaokao’ May Be the World’s Hardest Exam—and It Can Determine a Student’s Entire Future

As a former teacher, I’ve seen more than my fair share of standardized tests. So I can tell you with authority that if you’re looking for a method to determine a student’s ability to learn by rote, a standardized test will get the job done. But, of course, there’s so much more to a person than his ability to take a test, which is why tests like the SAT and ACT are only one part of a student’s college application. At least, that’s our mentality here in the West. In China, where society itself is much more standardized, the test is all there is.

In a recent article in The Guardian called "Is China’s gaokao the world’s toughest school exam?" Alec Ash details the exam all Chinese high school students must take, the outcome of which determines the entire future of their lives.

The test is 12 hours long and is mostly multiple choice. Students are tested on “Chinese, English, maths and a choice of either sciences (biology, chemistry, physics) or humanities (geography, history, politics).” There is an essay component, but the questions seem, at least to us here in the West, bizarre. According to The Guardian, last year’s prompts included “Do butterfly wings have colours?” and “Who do you admire the most? A biotechnology researcher, a welding engineering technician or a photographer?”

Upon completing the exam, students in China receive a three-digit score. And the score, according to The Guardian article, determines “life opportunities and earning potential.” It is the sole factor, it seems, in determining which college a student will go to, which job he will obtain, and even whom he will marry.

To us, here in the West, this probably sounds nuts. The idea of someone’s entire future resting on one exam is hard to stomach. What if he was having a bad day that day? What if he caught a bad break and had studied everything but the question that ended up on the test? What if he had a headache, or forgot his glasses, or was justtoo nervous to concentrate? I mean, come on, these are kids we’re talking about!